Donate SIGN UP

cavity wall insulation

Avatar Image
Hard@it | 14:58 Fri 19th Jun 2009 | Home & Garden
8 Answers
What are the points against cavity wall insulation ?
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 8 of 8rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by Hard@it. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Type 'cavity wall insulation problems' into Google and you get lots of sites that tell you its downsides. Although I've got it and I've never had any problems.
Question Author
Thanks for speedy reply dasherman
I'm against cavity wall insulation.

If you have any dirty wall-ties ( those with cement which dropped onto them during the building process) you could end up with damp spots appearing on your inside walls if the cavity is filled. Normaly moisture will bridge the cavity on a dirty wall-tie by capillary action but, because air is circulating within the cavity, it will evaporate before it reaches the inside wall.

Ron.
Question Author
yes, I follow what you are saying, I am not for it, but neighbours are, and I wondered what other people thought.
I would not have it.
-- answer removed --
A good point tonyted. Warm air from the house(or bungalow) gets into the wall cavity and assists with what you rightly describe as the 'thermos' effect.

Good on yer Hard@it for being sensible....best wishes...Ron

Question Author
My reckoning is that the void is there for a reason and no matter what insulating material is used it will do away with the void.
The void is there to prevent condensation and regardless what Manuf/Installers say, if they reckon that air can get through their product then that defeats the insulation factor.

I can understand if when building the house nowadays with even in some cases 300mm inbuilt insul. as part of the design, but this adding to a tried and tested natural anti condensation will not do any good. Furthermore this damp patching and missed areas factors seem to be mentioned a lot.
I'm not disagreeing with your final conclusion, but the thermos effect is actually based on having a vacuum in between the two walls, not air.

1 to 8 of 8rss feed

Do you know the answer?

cavity wall insulation

Answer Question >>